The Hague is the Netherlands’ political capital — seat of the parliament, the royal family, and the International Court of Justice — but it wears its authority with a lightness that surprises first-time visitors. The Binnenhof, the medieval complex of parliament buildings around a reflective pond, is the city’s heart: dignified, compact, and accessible in a way that would be unthinkable in most capitals. Across the pond, the Mauritshuis museum is small but devastating — Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring hangs here, along with Rembrandt’s Anatomy Lesson, in rooms intimate enough to study every brushstroke.
The Hague’s other identity is coastal. Scheveningen, the beach district, has a wide North Sea strand, a pier, and a promenade of seafood stalls serving fresh herring and kibbeling. The transition from government buildings to sand dunes takes about fifteen minutes by tram, which is part of the city’s unlikely charm. The Noordeinde Palace district has elegant shops and galleries, while the Hofkwartier around the old church offers independent boutiques and cafes with a village feel in the middle of a city of half a million people.
When to go: May to September for beach weather and outdoor events. January for the New Year’s herring-bite tradition at Scheveningen and the city’s cultural season in full swing.